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Herman Melville
(1819-91)
"A whale ship was my Yale College and my Harvard" (Moby
Dick)
Herman Melville was born into a large, well-respected, literary
family in New York in 1819. He contacted scarlet fever as a child
- a condition which was to leave him with permanently weakened eyes
and a fear of disease.
Melville's family fell on hard times when their import business
collapsed in 1830. The shock was too much for Allan Melville, Herman's
father, who died two years later. The family was by this time much
impoverished and Herman took a succession of menial and teaching
jobs in an effort to support his large family.
It was during this period that Melville first fell in love with
the sea, after joining the Merchant Ship St. Lawrence on a journey
to Liverpool. Having exhausted all other possible means of employment,
Melville set out on a whaler, the Acushnet, in January 1841.
The whaler voyaged to Polynesia, a land of mystery and romance which
Melville was later to describe in Typee. Melville lived with the
cannibalistic Typee people before joining another whaler, the Lucy
Ann. When this voyage proved unsuccessful, he joined a mutiny and
spent some time in a Polynesian jail. He described this period in
his second novel, Omoo. After several more voyages, and many brushes
with disaster, Melville returned home to find his family's fortunes
much improved.
Melville began to write and his novels caused an immediate impact,
both of critical acclaim and public outrage. In 1847 he married
Elizabeth Shaw, a young woman from a well respected Massachusetts
family. Melville could now support his family through his writing.
He wrote several
novels which were less well received until the brilliant Moby Dick
(originally called "The Whale") was finished in 1850.
The novel was not an instant success, but has since become regarded
as one of the greatest works in American literature.
Towards the end of his life, Melville began to concentrate on writing
poetry, which he saw as a superior form of literature to the novel.
His poems were not successful financially and, despite being thought
of now as one of the most significant American authors, he died
in relative poverty in New York City in 1891.
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